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Halloween II

This September, Scream Factory Brings the First Five Halloween Films to 4k Ultra HD

July 8, 2021 by Sean Decker

Coming this September 28th from Scream Factory, the first five films in the Halloween film franchise get the 4K Ultra HD treatment with individual blu-ray releases of John Carpenter’s Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, and Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers.

Check out a round-up of the disc’s bonus features below, and for more (including word on Scream Factory’s partnering with Sacred Bones Records for limited 4k Ultra HD and vinyl soundtrack box sets of the Halloween, Halloween II and Halloween III: Season of the Witch), head on over to Scream Factory here.

Halloween Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative, Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Co-Writer/Director John Carpenter And Actress Jamie Lee Curtis
  • Audio Commentary With Director Of Photography Dean Cundey, Editor Tommy Lee Wallace, And Actor Nick Castle

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative, Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With John Carpenter And Jamie Lee Curtis
  • Audio Commentary With Dean Cundey, Tommy Lee Wallace, And Nick Castle
  • “The Night She Came Home”
  • TV Version Footage
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Radio Spots

DISC THREE (BLU-RAY):

  • Original Color Timing Presentation
  • Vintage Interview With Producer Moustapha Akkad
  • “Halloween: A Cut Above The Rest”
  • “Halloween Unmasked 2000”
  • Halloween – The Extended Cut In HD (TV Inserts Are In Standard Definition)
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Radio Spots

Halloween 2 Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Director Rick Rosenthal
  • Audio Commentary With Stunt Coordinator Dick Warlock

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Director Rick Rosenthal
  • Audio Commentary With Stunt Coordinator Dick Warlock
  • “The Nightmare Isn’t Over – The Making Of Halloween II” Featuring Rick Rosenthal, Dick Warlock, Composer Alan Howarth, Director Of Photography Dean Cundey, Actors Lance Guest And Leo Rossi, And More
  • Horror’s Hallowed Grounds Revisiting The Original Shooting Locations
  • Deleted Scenes With Optional Audio Commentary With Rick Rosenthal
  • Alternate Ending With Optional Audio Commentary With Rick Rosenthal
  • Still Gallery
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV and Radio Spots

DISC THREE (DVD):

  • Television Cut (In Standard Definition)
  • Film Script (DVD-ROM)

Halloween 3 Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Director Tommy Lee Wallace
  • Audio Commentary With Actor Tom Atkins

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Tommy Lee Wallace
  • Audio Commentary With Tom Atkins
  • “Stand Alone: The Making Of Halloween III: Season Of The Witch” Featuring Tommy Lee Wallace, Actors Tom Atkins And Stacey Nelkin, Stunt Coordinator Dick Warlock, Director Of Photography Dean Cundey, And More
  • Horror’s Hallowed Grounds: Revisiting The Original Shooting Locations With Host Sean Clark And Tommy Lee Wallace
  • Interview With Make-Up Effects Artist Tom Burman
  • Still Gallery
  • Theatrical Trailers
  • TV Spots
  • Radio Spots

Halloween 4 Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Actors Ellie Cornell And Danielle Harris
  • Audio Commentary With Director Dwight H. Little And Author Justin Beahm

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Ellie Cornell And Danielle Harris
  • Audio Commentary With Dwight H. Little And Justin Beahm
  • “The Making Of Halloween 4: Final Cut”
  • “The Making Of Halloween 4”
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Still Gallery

Halloween 5 Bonus Features: 

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Actor Don Shanks
  • Audio Commentary With Director Dominique Othenin-Girard And Actors Danielle Harris And Jeffrey Landman

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Don Shanks
  • Audio Commentary With Dominique Othenin-Girard, Danielle Harris, And Jeffrey Landman
  • “Inside Halloween 5”
  • “The Making Of Halloween 5”
  • “On The Set: Behind-The-Scenes Footage”
  • Halloween 5 Promo
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN II (1981), HALLOWEEN III (1982), NEWS Tagged With: Halloween, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Halloween II, Halloween III, Scream Factory

‘Rewind’ to ’81: Donald “Dr. Loomis” Pleasence Talks Halloween on SNL w/ Eddie Murphy!

July 13, 2020 by Sean Decker

Our latest ‘Rewind’ into Halloween history takes us all the way back to the October 31, 1981 episode of Saturday Night Live, which was hosted by Halloween series star, the late great Donald Pleasence. Airing the day following the release of director Rick Rosenthal’s Halloween II, the SNL episode contained a few skits featuring veteran actor Pleasence, including the one below with SNL cast member Eddie Murphy, in which they both plug Halloween, while also discussing Murphy’s pre-show ritual. It’s a hoot, and also features a brief cameo by John Belushi, in his very last SNL appearance.

Did you see this when it originally aired?

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN II (1981) Tagged With: Donald Pleasence, Dr. Loomis, Eddie Murphy, Halloween, Halloween II, John Belushi, Michael Myers, Rick Rosenthal, Saturday Night Live, SNL

Cinematographer Gary B. Kibbe Passes Away

March 13, 2020 by Sean Decker

It’s with sadness that we report the passing of longtime John Carpenter collaborator and cinematographer Gary B. Kibbe.

According to Halloween director Carpenter’s official Twitter account, Kibbe was 79 years of age at the time of his passing.

Born January 9, 1941 in Los Angeles, California, Kibbe got his start in film working as a camera operator on several features in the 1970s, with his first Carpenter collaboration coming in 1981 by way of Rick Rosenthal’s Halloween II (which Carpenter produced), and his second on 1986’s Big Trouble in Little China, which Carpenter directed. Kibbe would later go on to photograph the majority of Carpenter’s films produced since the mid-1980s, including Prince of Darkness (1987), They Live (1988), Body Bags (1993), In the Mouth of Madness (1994), Village of the Damned (1995), Escape from L.A. (1996), Vampires (1998), Ghosts of Mars (2001).

Further credits as a cinematographer include 1984’s Sixteen Candles, 1986’s Stand by Me, the 1992 Tales from the Crypt episode “King of the Road,” and additional photography on 1996’s The Crow: City of Angels.

 

Our sincerest condolences to Kibbe’s friends and family from everyone here at HalloweenMovies.com.

__

l-to-r: Gary B. Kibbe, John Carpenter & Roddy Piper on the set of They Live (Photo Credit: Cinephilia & Beyond)

Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: Big Trouble in Little China, Body Bags, Escape from L.A., Gary B. Kibbe, Ghosts of Mars, Halloween II, In the Mouth of Madness, John Carpenter, Prince of Darkness, Sixteen Candles, Stand By Me, Tales from the Crypt, The Crow: City of Angels, They Live, Vampires, Village of the Damned

Excl. Interview & BTS Photos: Dan Roebuck Talks Halloween – Part 2

March 11, 2020 by Sean Decker

From his debut turn as a teenaged murderer in Tim Hunter’s 1986 cult drama River’s Edge to his role of “Arnold Walker” in the television sci-fi series “The Man in the High Castle,” prolific actor Dan Roebuck has over the span of his thirty-five year career demonstrated an impressive diversity working within multiple genres. But with over two hundred roles under his belt, the often-maligned category of horror remains to this day his personal favorite.

Dan Roebuck in Rob Zombie’s Halloween II

A monster fan from an early age and a lifetime collector of genre ephemera (his assemblage of oddities range from life-sized Frankenstein props and Famous Monsters of Filmland magazines to vintage 70s wax museum pennant banners and Don Post Studios masks, and most everything in between), Roebuck would also go on to further explore his love of horror through the arts via several genre roles, including but not limited to turns in Final Destination (2000), Bubba Ho-Tep (2002) and Larry Blamire’s 2009 cult indie The Lost Skeleton Returns Again (among others), as well as his own creation of his horror persona “Dr. Shocker,” host of Dr. Shocker’s Vault of Horror.

It’s his appearance though as “Lou Martini” in both Rob Zombie’s Halloween and Halloween II which genre fans may most recognize him for, and of which we dug into recently while chatting with the affable actor and filmmaker in his Los Angeles home cum-museum.

“For (2007’s) Halloween, I auditioned,” recalled Roebuck, who at the time had already worked with filmmaker Zombie on The Devil’s Rejects in 2005 (in which he appears as “Morris Green,” a role he’d reprise some years later in 2019’s 3 From Hell). “I’m not precious when it comes to that. Even though I had worked for Rob before I had to prove myself again. This is what I do. I’m an actor, so I don’t mind.”

Of the audition Roebuck remembers, “I actually was coming from a read for something else, and I had glued on a moustache and a beard, because the character I was reading for (in Halloween) was Chester Chesterfield, this groundskeeper that Michael Myers kills at a cemetery.”

“That role ended up going to Sid Haig,” continued Roebuck, “so I didn’t get that part, but Rob said, ‘Do you want to play the part of the strip club owner instead?’ So, that’s how I was cast in Halloween. And I remember I acted opposite Gary Grossman, who was the nerdy guy in (the 1984 film) Bachelor Party, and I was so excited, because I love that film. Gary was the other guy at the bar, and we shot a day or two.”

(left-to-right) Dan Roebuck & Gary Grossman in a scene deleted from Rob Zombie’s Halloween

Reminiscing on principal photography of Halloween, Roebuck offered, “It was in Valencia, California, at The Rabbit in Red set which they had built there. And while there is a shot of me in the movie, one brief glimpse, I think it turned out to my benefit that I got cut out of the film. Because of that, there was no definitive end to my character, which allowed Lou to come back in Halloween II. And that was more of a meal certainly than the role as it was written in the first film. In the first one I had one or two scenes, one of which was a nice one with Sheri (Moon Zombie). But the second film, the role was a much larger one, and it had a great death scene for my character, which we ended up shooting twice, because the first time we shot it, when Michael killed me, he wasn’t wearing the mask.”

As for Roebuck’s return in Halloween II, the actor recalled, “Because I had been in Halloween, it was assumed I suppose that I would be in Halloween II if the character were to return. So, three or four weeks before they were to shoot Halloween II, Rob calls me up and says, ‘Dan, we were just thinking, this guy in the script who’s this Frankenstein guy, I thought maybe it should be Lou Martini. What are you doing this weekend?’ I said, ‘I’ll be wherever you need me to be, Mr. Zombie.’ So, I flew right to Atlanta (Georgia) to the film’s production offices.”

With over two decades having passed in narrative since the introduction of his character in Rob Zombie’s Halloween, the character of Martini was not only required to look older in Zombie’s follow-up, but also at times to sport the previously mentioned Frankenstein’s Monster getup as the script necessitated.

(left-to-right) Dan Roebuck & Wayne Toth (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

“So, it was (makeup department head) Douglas Noe who handled the age makeup and the sideburns, and (special effects makeup designer) Wayne Toth who created the second Frankenstein look,” remembered Roebuck. “So, I went down there, and I was like a kid in a candy store! Wayne is a great makeup man, and on top of that I had friends in the Atlanta area, fellow monster collectors, and they got to come to set and to meet Rob, while the makeup department established the looks.” (Writer’s note: additional never-before-seen photos at the end of this article).

“And I’ll tell you what my favorite part of it was,” expounded Roebuck. “I was in the wardrobe trailer waiting on something, the pants I was going to wear or whatever, and there were some Don Post masks in there. I said, ‘Oh, are you using these in the film?’ And they said, ‘No, we can’t get permission (from Don Post Studios) to use them.’ So, I called Don Post Jr., and he answered the phone, and I said to him, ‘Don, I’m on the set of this new Halloween movie that Rob Zombie’s doing, and do you know this mask? And this mask? Can they use them in the movie? And Don said, ‘Yeah.’ So, I said to production, ‘OK, you now have permission to use these masks in the film!’ So somewhere in the background of Halloween II are those Don Post masks! What are the odds?”

As for Roebuck’s death scene as originally shot in Halloween II, the actor stated, “The first time, you know, it wasn’t much of a death. Tyler kind of just threw me into a locker, and that was that. He had already stomped Jeff Daniel Phillips, and I don’t remember what he did to Sylvia Jefferies’ character. But the deaths were much quicker. And then, when we went to re-shoot with Tyler wearing the mask, we shot all that totally inappropriate stuff. You know, the, ‘You want to bang Frankenstein’s monster?’ stuff.”

(left-to-right) Sylvia Jefferies & Dan Roebuck in Rob Zombie’s Halloween II

Of that, Roebuck recalled, “So, my wife called during filming and asked, ‘How’s it going? What are you up to?’ And I said, ‘Oh, it’s a hard day, you know, I’m up here with this naked actress.’ My wife said, ‘What? She’s naked? How naked?’ And I said, ‘Well, naked.’ You know, you can’t for the life of you convince someone who you’re married to that spending a day with a gorgeous naked lady is work. So, don’t even try.”

Regarding his death scene redux, “I’m sure that I have brain damage from it, to this day,” he laughed. “When we were shooting the scene in the (strip club’s) hall, and I’m trying to think of how the shots are configured, but I think I was running away from (Michael Myers actor) Tyler Mane, and the camera was behind him and he yelled, ‘Dan!’ And I turned around to see that he was running at me in huge steps, and he probably covered thirty-five feet of hallway in just five of them, and I was like, ‘Ahhh!’ Because he was Michael Myers, and I hadn’t seen him in the mask up until that point. And that was quite simply total immersion: the immersion of your child self into your adult self, and from the kid to the artist. None of that was lost on me. From the boy who was inspired by movie monsters to act and to create to the adult who later was working with movie monsters, it was full circle. It was a gift.”

As for Roebuck’s personal relationship with the 6’ 8” Mane, “He’s just quite simply a really nice man. You know, my daughter has always called him ‘Buttercup,’ because as a little kid she gave all of my friends nicknames. So, she told him, ‘I’m going to call you Buttercup.’ And he just smiled and said, ‘OK.’”

For more, check out part 1 of our interview with Roebuck here, and for those interested in Roebuck’s latest endeavors, you can visit achannelofpeace.org for more.

(left-to-right) Gary Grossman, Dan Roebuck, Ken Foree & Rob Zombie (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

(left-to-right) Dan Roebuck, Tyler Mane & Sylvia Jefferies (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

(left-to-right) Douglas Noe & Dan Roebuck (Photo Credit: Dan Roebuck)

(left-to-right) Dan Roebuck & Rob Zombie (Photo Credit: Dan Roebuck)

Between takes on the set of Rob Zombie’s Halloween II (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

 

 

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (2007), HALLOWEEN II (2009), HALLOWEEN INTERVIEWS Tagged With: Bubba Ho-Tep, Dan Roebuck, Don Post Studios, Douglas Noe, Dr, Famous Monsters of Filmland, Final Destination, Frankenstein, Gary Grossman, Halloween, Halloween II, Ken Foree, Michael Myers, River's Edge, Rob Zombie, Shocker, Sid Haig, Sylvia Jefferies, The Lost Skeleton Returns Again, Tyler Mane, Wayne Toth

Excl. Interview & BTS Photos: Dan Roebuck Talks Halloween, River’s Edge & More

March 4, 2020 by Sean Decker

The Rabbit in Red. For horror audiences watching John Carpenter’s classic film Halloween in 1978, the crimson book of matches which bore that name served merely as a quasi MacGuffin: a piece of strategically placed production art intended to communicate antagonist Michael Myers journey from Smith’s Grove to a remote set of train tracks outside Haddonfield. For Halloween fans though, who often obsess over minutia, the lounge’s name itself would become a ‘deep cut’ as emblematic as the film’s iconic poster art, with the Rabbit logo finding its way first onto black market merchandise, and later licensed product.

The Rabbit in Red – Rob Zombie’s Halloween 

Rockstar turned writer and director Rob Zombie also took notice, and in penning his 2007 reimagining of the film he appropriated the Rabbit name, transforming it from a simple Midwestern lounge to a full-blown strip club in which young Michael Myer’s mother Deborah works. The Rabbit in Red would also go on to make an appearance in Zombie’s follow-up to his remake, 2009’s Halloween II. And as with most cinematic portrayals of strip clubs, it wouldn’t be complete without a colorful owner.

Enter prolific actor Dan Roebuck, who as The Rabbit in Red’s proprietor “Lou Martini” not only inhabited the role Zombie had written, but also imbued it with some of his own monster loving tendencies.

Sitting down recently with Roebuck in his Los Angeles home-cum-museum (the actor and filmmaker has over time amassed an entirely awe-inspiring collection of antiquities and artifacts, which combined work as a living history of the horror genre itself), we chatted of his involvement in Zombie’s divisive take on Halloween, as well as his early beginnings as an actor opposite Dennis Hopper in 1986’s infamous River’s Edge, and a whole lot more.

Dan Roebuck (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

“I first saw John Carpenter’s Halloween in 1979 at the Boyd Theatre in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania,” recalled Roebuck of his teenaged introduction to the film, “and I was obsessed. What Carpenter presented in that movie was something lacking in modern horror film, which was, he re-introduced suspense to the story, as opposed to the William Castle approach of it simply being, “Thrills and Chills!” So, it became a mixture of the two. And I remember being absolutely 100% interested in how that was different.”

Not content with simply being a passive viewer (Roebuck had already at an early age shown an interest in movie monsters and magic, as evidenced by his self-applied makeups using Imagineering products, in direct emulation of his film idol Lon Chaney), the actor decided to augment Michael Myers’ silver screen scares by terrifying captive theater-goers himself.

“I actually made myself up with a rubber white face, because I don’t think anyone knew then that Myers’ mask was actually a (modified) William Shatner mask,” said the now fifty-seven year-old, “and I came back later and ran through the theater while Halloween was playing, just like they used to hire people to do during screenings of The Tingler (in 1959). Bob Clausen, the theater’s manager, he knew I liked to do makeup, and as some friends and I had already started a Rocky Horror Picture Show revival there called the Lehigh Valley Rocky Horror Players, he’d asked me to do it. I guess it didn’t bother him that my fifteen year-old self was running around a screening of a R-rated horror film. But being killed on the screen by Michael Myers himself so many years later? I couldn’t have seen that coming.”

Roebuck’s pubescent interest in Halloween didn’t wane, and following Rick Rosenthal’s follow-up Halloween II in 1981, he like many was eager to see what next the series would bring, and for him the Myer’less third film, 1982’s Halloween III: Season of the Witch, didn’t disappoint.

“By Halloween III they had me,” remembers Roebuck, “because by then I was reading Fangoria magazine, and I was well aware that the masks in the film, the glow-in-the-dark skull, the lime-green witch and the jack-o’-lantern, were made by Don Post Studios, and I lusted after Don Post masks.”

From Dan Roebuck’s Collection. (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

While his love of horror and sci-fi continued to grow, so did his passion for performing, and a move to Hollywood, California, would soon follow. Roles came quickly, and  his second feature film (following his top-billed 1985 comedy Cavegirl), Tim Hunter’s previously mentioned River’s Edge, found Roebuck inhabiting the role of a teenaged murderer opposite the late Dennis Hopper.

Written by Neal Jimenez and co-starring a young Keanu Reeves, Ione Skye, Crispin Glover and Joshua Miller (who had made his own film debut in Halloween III), the suburban, post-punk flick is based on an actual 1981 crime, in which a sixteen-year-old Milpitas, California resident raped and murdered his fourteen-year-old girlfriend before boasting about the crime to his peers, who then took over two full days to report it.

In River’s Edge, Roebuck portrays a representation of that murderer, the unhinged and disassociated “Samson.”

“I went in as the character,” Roebuck recalled of the audition. “I greased my hair down and put on clothes that were very similar to the (eventual) costuming in the film, like a plaid shirt over some kind of t-shirt, and I walked into the room with a can of beer, cracked open the can and said, ‘Go ahead.’ As far as (director) Tim Hunter knew, I was just some dirty, crazy kid (casting director) Carrie Frazier had found. And the scene I was reading was the scene at the river with (Dennis Hopper’s character of) Feck. You know. ‘So, why’d you kill her? She tell you to eat shit?’ All of that stuff. It was crazy.”

(left-to-right) Actors Roxanna Zal, Josh Richmond, Daniel Roebuck and Ione Skye between takes on River’s Edge (Photo Copyright: Daniel Roebuck)

Already a legend having appeared in such iconic American films as Rebel Without a Cause and Easy Rider, prolific actor Hopper (1936-2010) was however at the time working on a career revival following a recent stint in rehab. Of the trio of films which helped him attain it, one was David Lynch’s Academy Award nominated Blue Velvet, which he had wrapped just prior to principal photography of River’s Edge.

“I only remember the Blue Velvet thing because when we were shooting outside of Feck’s house,” remembered Roebuck. “River’s Edge cinematographer Fred Elms, who had also served as director of photography on Blue Velvet, gave Hopper a wax ear acupuncture model, and none of us knew why. But Dennis was very entertained by it, and I remember it so well.”

As for working with the seasoned actor (many of their scenes together found the two shooting nights on the banks of the American River outside Sacramento, California), “I probably wasn’t smart enough to be intimidated by him,” Roebuck said. “And that’s not a joke. I was such a fan of his. But it was so intimate, him and me. I mean, he’d work with the other kids, then they’d all leave, and I’d have night upon night upon night with just him, and only him. All to myself. And I was elated, actor to actor.”

Daniel Roebuck and Dennis Hopper share a laugh on the set of Rivers Edge (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

Of those scenes which they share in River’s Edge, inarguably the most disturbing revolve around the two characters’ admissions to one another of the unrelated murders of two women, an act Hopper’s character of Feck tearfully regrets onscreen.

“I remember him saying to me off camera while he was crying, that he was thinking of (actress) Natalie Wood,” recalled Roebuck. “She had just died, and she’d been his friend who he’d acted with in Rebel Without a Cause. It was very weird too. Rarely does an actor share the emotional place they go to in order to ‘get there.’ It’s such a personal thing, and I started to weep while watching him cry.”

(left-to-right) Roxanna Zal, Crispin Glover, Josh Richmond, Keanu Reeves, Ione Skye, Phil Brock, Daniel Roebuck and Danyi Deats relax between set-ups on the Rivers Edge (Photo Copyright: Dan Roebuck)

Upon theatrical release in 1986 River’s Edge achieved critical acclaim and cult status, and as a result Roebuck’s career was in full swing. Over the next two decades he’d book well over one hundred film and television roles, including turns in 1987’s Dudes, 1993’s The Fugitive and 2000’s Final Destination, but it wouldn’t be until the late 2000s when his career came full circle. The Pennsylvania teen and monster enthusiast, who’d once frightened theater-goers in his self-applied faux Myers makeup, was about to be murdered on the silver screen by that very masked killer in Rob Zombie’s reimagining.

And that’s what we jump into in part two, which you can read here.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (2007), HALLOWEEN II (2009), HALLOWEEN INTERVIEWS Tagged With: Cavegirl, Crispin Glover, Dan Roebuck, Daniel Roebuck, Dennis Hopper, Don Post, Dr. Shocker, Fangoria, Halloween, Halloween II, Imagineering, Ione Skye, John Carpenter, Keanu Reeves, Michael Myers, Rick Rosenthal, River's Edge, Season of the Witch, The Rabbit in Red, Tim Hunter

Did Halloween H20’s Shooting Script Acknowledge The Cult of Thorn? Patrick Lussier Speaks

May 15, 2019 by Sean Decker

Over the course of eleven films the Halloween franchise has taken several varied narrative paths, and director Steve Miner’s 1998 film Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later is no exception.

Intended as the finale to the story arc of character Laurie Strode (the series’ ‘Final Girl’ originated by actress Jamie Lee Curtis in John Carpenter’s 1978 classic Halloween, who reprised her role three years later in Rick Rosenthal’s direct sequel Halloween II), Miner’s film intentionally ignored everything which followed the two, including the narrative thread established in the sequels Halloween 4, 5 & 6. Those three films, without the inclusion of Curtis, saw series’ slasher Michael Myers set his sights on a new target, one Jamie Lloyd, a character who was introduced as the orphaned daughter of Strode, the latter having perished in an automobile accident.

But what if H20 hadn’t ignored this thread?

IMDB legend has it that the shooting script of H20, as written by Robert Zappia and Matt Greenberg (from a loose treatment by Kevin Williamson) allegedly bridged the gap with a scene in which a Hillcrest student Sarah (H20 actress Jodi Lyn O’Keefe) delivers a class report on the “Haddonfield Murders,” which ties the series’ disjointed narrative threads together (you can read the script pages below), and in effect renders the Lloyd narrative canon.

Above: Actress Danielle Harris as ‘Jamie Lloyd’ in Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

So, was the scene shot? We reached out to Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later editor Patrick Lussier last week for clarification, and you can read his response below.

But first, the scene in question.

INT. CLASSROOM – LATER THAT DAY

Students file into the class, sit in their assigned seats. KERI stands behind a desk at the head of the class. The Bell Rings.

KERI

Good morning, class.  Mr. Elliot’s out sick this week…turns out it was his appendix.

The students ad-lib “COOL,” “ALRIGHT,” “YEAH.”

KERI(cont’d)

Your compassion is overwhelming.  But I’m sure you’ll be happy to hear that he gave me the list of students who will be giving their oral reports today.

The students groan.

KERI (cont’d)

I thought so.  First up is Sarah Locke.

Sarah crosses to the podium at the head of the class, stands behind it. She reads off a stack of index cards in front of her…

SARAH (rapidly)

“The Haddonfield Murders” by Pamela Whittington.  A totally gruesome depiction of serial killer Michael Meyers’ path of destruction in a small Illinois town.

Keri sits up in her chair, uneasy.  Of all the books…

During the following, we INTERCUT between the described flashbacks and Keri, as she struggles to maintain her composure as the memories come flooding back —

SARAH (cont’d)

The riveting tale begins with young Meyers repeatedly stabbing his older sister to death on Halloween night in 1963.

BEGIN FLASHBACK.

During the previous dialogue we see the correlating scene from “Halloween” where young Michael Meyers in clown attire murders his sister.

SARAH (OS) (cont’d)

Years later Meyers escaped from Dr. Loomis’ care at Smith’s Grove Institution and returned home to Haddonfield.

During the previous dialogue we once again see the correlating scene from “Halloween” where Michael escapes from outside the gates of Smith’s Grove in Dr. Loomis’ station wagon.

SARAH (OS) (cont’d)

It was there that he stalked Laurie Strode…Meyers’ younger sister…

We see the correlating scene from “Halloween” where the Shape watches Laurie Strode through the screen door as she approaches the old Meyers’ house.

SARAH (OS) (cont’d)

What followed was a night of terror as Michael Meyers slaughtered one innocent victim after another. Strangled some… stabbed others… in the end it was a Halloween of unprecedented carnage.

We see a MONTAGE of murders from “Halloween” and “Halloween II.”

END OF FLASHBACK.

ON Keri, eyes swelling, struggling to keep the lid on her emotions…

SARAH (cont’d)

Ironically, Laurie survived that night, but was said to have died in a car accident years later… leaving behind her only daughter, Jamie.

BEGIN FLASHBACK.

During the previous dialogue, we see footage of young Jamie from “Halloween IV.”

SARAH (cont’d)

The book maintains there is truth to the rumor that Laurie Strode is actually alive and well and living under a new identity.  Claiming that she gave up her daughter for adoption to protect the eight-year- old from her psychotic Uncle. Bad idea.  Last Halloween, Jamie’s mutilated body was found in a barn just outside of Haddonfield.

We see Jamie’s demise as depicted in “Halloween VI.”

END FLASHBACK.

ON Keri, unable to stand it any longer.  She grabs her bag, heads for the door.

KERI

Excuse me…

Keri darts out of the classroom.

The students sit in stunned silence, baffled.  Sarah collects her cards and heads back to her seat…

SARAH (cont’d)

That was like so rude.

INT. GIRLS’ RESTROOM – MINUTES LATER

Keri bursts through the bathroom door…locks herself inside an empty stall…drops to her knees, barely making it over the toilet before tossing up her breakfast.

When queried, Lussier said of the pages to HalloweenMovies.com, “That’s an interesting scene, but never one that I read or encountered in the footage.  As far as I know, there was never a scene like (above) that (was) shot. There was a big rewrite shortly before production where several things changed, including the (removal of the) whole character Charles S. Dutton had been hired to play (which included a death scene in the middle of the film) although the (scripted) scene as described was never shot, or if it was, it never came through editorial (which would be highly unlikely).”

Lussier concluded, “So, there was never any cult reference in H20 shot, or in the scripts that I read for the film.”

So there you have it?

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN H20 (1998) Tagged With: Halloween, Halloween H20, Halloween II, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jodi Lyn O'Keefe, John Carpenter, Laurie Strode, Michael Myers, Patrick Lussier, Rick Rosenthal, Steve Miner

‘REWIND’ to ’81: Halloween II For Fright Fans

May 2, 2019 by Sean Decker

 

A fire lit in 1960 by Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho and Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom, the flames of the slasher film subgenre were fanned in 1974 by Bob Clark’s Black Christmas, and then most assuredly whipped into a firestorm in 1978 by John Carpenter’s seminal and immensely profitable Halloween. And if imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, director Carpenter and his leading lady Jamie Lee Curtis may have indeed been gratified to witness the deluge of films released upon its heels which hoped to achieve similar success.

1979’s When a Stranger Calls, Tourist Trap, Driller Killer and the unrelated ‘confusion’ marketed The Day After Halloween (among others) were the first to take a stab at the box office, all with middling success, while 1980 saw the release of the first (and well received) Friday the 13th film, as well as a few dozen others, including Maniac, Christmas Evil, Terror Train and Prom Night, the latter two featuring Curtis herself. But it wasn’t until 1981 when the actress, who by that time had been crowned the ‘Scream Queen’ of the genre, would return to the role of Laurie Strode which she’d originated in Carpenter’s classic.

Released on October 30th, 1981, director Rick Rosenthal’s Halloween II picked up from where its predecessor left off, and documented more of ‘The Night He Came Home,’ as the film’s antagonist Michael Myers continued to stalk heroine Strode from the streets of Haddonfield into the town’s hospital, and audiences reacted with wild enthusiasm. The flick’s domestic box office take was $25.5 million from a $2.5 million budget.

And while film critics Gene Siskell and Roger Ebert may have heralded the original Halloween as a film of “artistry and craftsmanship,” while later vilifying the slasher genre as a whole with a seemingly incessant smear campaign, calling them “Movies that hate women” (see a portion of the pair’s September 1980 episode of their weekly PBS show Sneak Previews for more below), other critics’ responses to Rosenthal’s follow-up were overwhelmingly positive.

In fact, The New York Times film reviewer Janet Maslin called Halloween II a, “Class act.”

Read on.

—

HALLOWEEN II FOR FRIGHT FANS

ALL those long, dark corridors. And all those empty – or are they empty? – rooms. Not to mention all those wicked-looking medical instruments. Halloween II is set in a hospital at night, on the precise night when the original Halloween left off. The bodies are being counted. The killer is still at large. And the heroine, Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis), has been whisked off for medical treatment at the local hospital, where she is given a sedative and put to bed. And left in her room. All alone.

Will the killer follow Laurie to the emergency ward and pick off nurse after nurse until he gets to her? Will the nurses wander off one at a time and play right into his hands? Will the killer think of new and ingenious ways to dispense with them? The answer to these questions is probably also the answer to ”Will there be a Halloween III?”

Actually, Halloween II is good enough to deserve a sequel of its own. By the standards of most recent horror films, this – like its predecessor – is a class act. There’s some variety to the crimes, as there is to the characters, and an audience is likely to do more screaming at suspenseful moments than at scary ones. The gore, while very explicit and gruesome, won’t make you feel as if you’re watching major surgery. The direction and camera work are quite competent, and the actors don’t look like amateurs. That may not sound like much to ask of a horror film, but it’s more than many of them offer. And Halloween II, in addition to all this, has a quick pace and something like a sense of style.

John Carpenter, who directed the first film, is co-writer and co-producer (with Debra Hill) this time, and composed the repetitive, nerve-jangling music with Alan Howarth. He has assigned the directing chores to Rick Rosenthal, who follows ably in Mr. Carpenter’s footsteps. Mr. Rosenthal’s methods are sometimes familiar but almost always reliable. When a yellow light summoning nurses goes off at the hospital, Mr. Rosenthal makes the accompanying sound so loud and startling you’ll think there’s a Canada goose honking in your ear – a cheap trick, but an effective one. On the debit side, Mr. Rosenthal is capable of showing not one but three closeups of a hypodermic needle entering flesh when one of his characters is due for some harmless injections.

The timing of the killer’s surprise appearances has a dependable regularity. Halloween II is suspenseful enough, incidentally, not to rely too heavily on the killer’s sneaking up on his victims out of nowhere. Sometimes he just appears in the corner of the frame and stays there for a while, toying with the audience before moving in upon his prey.

Halloween II, which opens today at the Cinerama II and other theaters, is something of an audience participation movie, if the shrieks and giggles of one preview audience are any indication. In addition to the shouts of ”Get outta there!” that accompany each nurse’s efforts to find out what was making that funny noise in that spare room, the movie prompts Laurie Strode’s well-wishers to scream in excitement once Laurie wakes up and starts running. By this time the killer has developed some supernatural powers, which suggest that a Halloween III may be a lot more far fetched than its predecessors.

But don’t worry about Laurie: if there’s a next film, she’ll probably be around to see it through. The same may not be true of Donald Pleasence’s Dr. Loomis, who is caught up in this film’s fiery crescendo, which is by no means the worst thing that happens to him. The worst thing is his being forced to say ”We’re all afraid of the dark inside of ourselves,” in one of the film’s mercifully brief efforts to explain the killer, his horrid habits and his troubled mind.

Siskell and Ebert’s Sneak Previews, September 1980

Halloween II Trailer

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN II (1981) Tagged With: Alfred Hitchcock, Black Christmas, Christmas Evil, Driller Killer, Friday the 13th, Halloween, Halloween II, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Maniac, Michael Myers, Peeping Tom, Prom Night, Rick Rosenthal, Siskell and Ebert, slasher, Sneak Previews, Terror Train, The Day After Halloween, The New York Times, Tourist Trap, When a Stranger Calls

‘REWIND’ to ‘82: Halloween III Masks To Help Scare Up Sales

April 25, 2019 by Sean Decker

In 1982, genre fans could score themselves a Don Post-created mask from Halloween III: The Season of the Witch for a mere $25.00 (those same vintage masks now go for roughly $500.00 in the collector space, which means we’re thankful for Trick Or Treats Studios’ current and affordable reissues).

In today’s ‘Rewind’ article (a new series in which we’ll take a look back at vintage coverage and moments of and on the Halloween franchise), writer Aljean Harmetz’s October 16, 1982 piece in The New York Times focuses on mask-maker Post, who talks those original mass-produced Halloween III masks, as well as Universal Pictures’ at-times unique marketing approach to the R-rated film (which interestingly enough included inviting children – who’d colored newspaper advertisements of the murderous Silver Shamrock masks – to the studios’ backlot for a mask-making demo), and a whole lot more.

So gather around, kids. The big giveaway is at 9. And don’t forget to wear your masks.

___

HALLOWEEN III MASKS TO SCARE UP SALES

The three Halloween masks that form an integral part of the plot of a new movie, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, will also be an adjunct to the merchandising of the movie, which opens next Friday in 1,250 theaters across the country.

The glow-in-the-dark sunken skull, the menacing orange Day-Glo pumpkin head and the lime-green latex witch mask that a diabolical mask maker in the movie hopes will make millions of children his prisoners will be offered for use in the real world this Halloween.

Because the three masks will retail for about $25 each, it is doubtful that many 10-year-old trick-or-treaters will wrap themselves in the witch’s dark blue-gray cowl or don the clammy black vinyl of the skeleton. ”Our masks are for an adult market, 13-to-35-year olds,” said Don Post, whose father was one of the creators of the latex mask industry nearly 45 years ago. Although Don Post Studios was successful with masks of monsters from Universal movies in the 1960’s, Mr. Post dates the dramatic realization that there was money to be made from intertwining masks and movies to 1970, when 20th Century-Fox decided to license masks for a then-three-year-old movie, Planet of the Apes.

”The results were awesome,’‘ said Mr. Post.

Darth Vader a Big Hit

But they were nothing compared to the sales of masks of the characters from Star Wars, the 1977 movie. More than $3 million worth of the Post Studios’ black plastic masks of Darth Vader alone have been sold at prices ranging from $30 to $40.

The problem with making character masks from movies is that ‘‘they only become appealing to the public after audiences have identified with the movie,” said Mr. Post. ”Buyers for stores have no imagination. No one wanted Star Wars masks until the week after the movie came out. Then we were deluged.”

According to Mr. Post, the masks from Halloween III are the first to be exactly the same as those featured in a movie. In fact, they were made from the same molds. ”Because the masks are so significant to the movie, they could become a cult item, with fans wanting to wear them when they go to see the movie,” he said.

Universal is sponsoring radio promotions involving the masks in cities around the country. In southern California, for example, children who color advertisements of the masks can accompany their parents on the Universal Studio tour free. And on the tour, Don Post will give mask-making demonstrations.

A $40 Million Halloween

The $300,000 Halloween, directed by John Carpenter and produced by Debra Hill, is the most successful independently distributed movie of all time, having sold $40 million worth of tickets in the United States. Halloween III, which cost $4.6 million, including $2 million in overhead paid to Universal, does not use the same plot as Halloween and Halloween II about a knife-wielding maniac. This film focuses on Dan O’Herlihy as a demented toy maker rather than on Jamie Lee Curtis as a frightened baby sitter.

”It’s a pod picture, not a knife picture,” said Miss Hill, who chose to name the town in which the grisly happenings take place at Santa Mira, in honor of the town in Don Siegel’s classic 1956 pod movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers. The tie-in of masks and movie was an accident born of necessity. ”We didn’t exactly have a whole lot of money for things like props,” said Miss Hill. ”So we asked Post, who had provided the shape mask for the earlier Halloween movies, if we could work out a deal. He said, ‘Don’t give me money. Give me the merchandising rights and we’ll share the profits.’ ”

The skull and witch are adaptations of standard Post Studios masks, but the jack-o’-lantern was created for Halloween III. ”Every society in every time has had its masks that suited the mood of the society,” said Mr. Post, ”from the masked ball to clowns to makeup. People want to act out a feeling inside themselves – angry, sad, happy, old. It may be a sad commentary on present-day America that horror masks are the best sellers.”

Big Item for Collectors

While the less expensive Post Studios masks, priced at $8.50, are sold in toy stores, most of the $20-and-up movie tie-in masks are available only at such places as costume and magic shops and theme parks. Although 70 percent of all masks are sold during the weeks before Halloween, Mr. Post has a file of more than 1,000 letters from people who are mask collectors, some specializing in movie monsters, some in specific films such as Star Wars.

Post Studios has, of course, had its failures – Star Trek among them. ”The characters were too human,” said Mr. Post. ”We tried to do Spock several times, and it never worked out. Successful characters for masks have to be bigger than life. Monsters are bigger than life.” Perhaps for the same reason, he added, the sale of Annie wigs have been disappointing.

What Mr. Post calls the ”Rolls-Royces” of generic masks – werewolves, witches, vampires – sell perhaps 2,000 a year. A successful licensed character like Frankenstein’s Monster or the Creature from the Black Lagoon can sell 6,000 to 20,000. Yoda, from The Empire Strikes Back, is now the second-best-selling mask, behind Darth Vader; but probably not for long.

On long tables in the Post factory -with the acrid smell of ammonia thick as soup and jets blowing 110-degree air at plaster molds – thousands of E.T. heads are being poured, trimmed, painted, bagged, and boxed. The difficulty in designing an E.T. mask, the length of the head, has been solved by a rigid plastic strip, and Mr. Post expects 70,000 of the over-the-head latex E.T. masks to be in stores by Christmas.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN III (1982), MERCHANDISE Tagged With: Dan O'Herlihy, Darth Vader, Debra Hill, Don Post, Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween III, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, Silver Shamrock, Spock, Star Trek, Star Wars, The New York Times, trick or treat studios, Universal, Yoda

Horror’s Hallowed Grounds Host Sean Clark Talks Screen-Used Halloween Props

April 3, 2019 by HalloweenMovies

The latest episode of the docu-series Collection Complete (which takes an in-depth look into the lives of artists and the collections that fuel their work) returns for an expanded look into the rarely-seen prop collection of Horror’s Hallowed Grounds host Sean Clark, which includes screen-used items from the Halloween franchise, and a whole lot more.

You can watch the episode below.

The episode (which serves as part two on Clark’s Halloween collection) also chronicles the evolution of his horror location docu-series Horror’s Hallowed Grounds, which has featured many filming locations from the Halloween franchise, from the Myers house in South Pasadena, CA to the home of Halloween II’s Mrs. Elrod in the same. Speaking of which, Clark shows off that cutting board (which he now owns), as well as an original Halloween shooting script, given to him by The Shape himself, Nick Castle.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN (2007), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN H20 (1998), HALLOWEEN II (1981), HALLOWEEN II (2009), HALLOWEEN III (1982), HALLOWEEN RESURRECTION (2002), HALLOWEEN VI (1995), JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN Tagged With: Collection Complete, Fright Rags, Halloween, Halloween 6, Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers, Halloween II, horror, Horrors Hallowed Grounds, Michael Myers, Mrs. Elrod, Nick Castle, Sean Clark, The Shape, trick or treat studios

Horror’s Hallowed Grounds Host Sean Clark Talks His Screen-used Halloween Mask Collection

March 8, 2019 by HalloweenMovies

The latest episode of the docu-series Collection Complete (which takes an in-depth look into the lives of artists and the collections that fuel their work) takes a deep dive into the rarely-seen prop collection of Horror’s Hallowed Grounds host Sean Clark, which include screen-worn masks from Halloween III: Season of the Witch through Halloween: Resurrection, and much more.

You can watch the episode below.

The episode (which serves as part one of two on Clark’s Halloween collection) also chronicles the evolution of his horror location docu-series Horror’s Hallowed Grounds, which has featured many filming locations from the Halloween franchise, from the Myers house in South Pasadena, CA to the home of Halloween II’s Mrs. Elrod in the same, as well as her bloody cutting board (guess who now owns the latter? Well, Clark does, of course).

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN (2007), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN H20 (1998), HALLOWEEN II (1981), HALLOWEEN II (2009), HALLOWEEN III (1982), HALLOWEEN RESURRECTION (2002), HALLOWEEN VI (1995), JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN Tagged With: Collection Complete, daniel ferrands, Fright Rags, giveaway, Halloween, Halloween 6, Halloween H20, Halloween II, halloween masks, Halloween: Resurrection, Halloween: Season of the Witch, Horrors Hallowed Grounds, John Carpenter, Malek Akkad, mask collection, masks, Michael Myers, Sean Clark, trick or treat studios

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